Earlier this year, Chris Christie appointee David Wildstein pleaded guilty to ordering lane closings on the George Washington bridge in 2003 to punish a New Jersey mayor for not supporting Christie’s gubernatorial bid. Wildstein is now a star witness against two other people in Christie’s inner circle who’ve been charged with conspiring to close the bridge lanes. Testifying in federal court today, Wildstein said that when Christie was told about the plot, Christie laughed and joked about it.
From New York:
“Mr. Baroni said, ‘Governor I have to tell you about something,'” Wildstein testified, saying that Baroni and Christie often adopted a “very sarcastic tone” when they were talking politics. “Mr. Baroni said to Governor Christie, ‘Governor, I can tell you there’s a tremendous amount of traffic in Fort Lee this morning, major traffic jams, and Mayor [Mark] Sokolich is very frustrated.” He alleged that Baroni then added, “You’ll be pleased to know that Mayor Sokolich is having trouble getting his telephone calls returned.”
According to Wildstein, Christie replied with similar sarcasm, “I imagine he wouldn’t be getting his phone calls returned.” … The governor still called Wildstein by the pseudonym he used on the [influential political blog] website, “Wally Edge.” So Christie surely understood the import of what Baroni allegedly told him next: “Mr. Baroni said to Governor Christie that I was monitoring the traffic, I was watching over everything,” Wildstein testified. “Governor Christie said in the sarcastic tone of the conversation, ‘Well. I’m sure Mr. Edge would not be involved in anything political.” Then, Wildstein said, “he laughed.”
“This was our one constituent. I was pleasing my one constituent,” Wildstein said. “I was proud of it. I was happy that he’s happy.”